We had several places where we were trying to get the source file of a class for which we're generating HMR-related code. These calls will fail if the class was transformed so we have to get its source file through the original node.
Fixes#60287.
PR Close#60298
A build will still fail in this case. However, for the language service,
this allows the component to exist in the compiler registry and prevents
cascading diagnostics within an IDE due to "missing" components. The
originating template related errors will still be reported in the IDE.
This case is particularly important when a template file either does
not exist or is inaccessible to the language service.
PR Close#58673
Now that the expression AST contains parenthesized expressions, this
refactors the template pipeline to strip out the ones we don't need.
PR Close#60169
Following up on #60127 which added the concept of a parenthesized
expression to the output AST, this does the same for the expression AST.
PR Close#60169
Previously we never could use relative imports to import e.g. `Component`
in e.g. the `core/tests/bundling` folder. This was necessary because otherwise the
Angular compiler wouldn't process those files as it wouldn't recognize
the Angular decorator as the one from `@angular/core`.
Notably this still isn't a large issue because relative imports still
work for most core tests, that are JIT compiled!
For bundling tests though, or some smaller targets, our new upcoming
guidelines for using relative imports inside the full package; fall
apart. This commit unblocks this effort and allows us to use relative
imports in all tests of `packages/core`. This is achieved by leveraging
the existing `isCore` functionality of the compiler, and fixing a few
instances that were missing before.
PR Close#60268
Currently only components can have resources, because they're the only symbol kinds being type checked. Since we want to add directives to it, these changes rework the resource handling to accommodate them.
PR Close#60191
Currently the `TemplateSourceManager` is set up to specifically cater to component templates. These changes make it more generic so we can reuse it for directives.
PR Close#60191
Currently a lot of the internal type checking data structures are set up specifically for components, because we only support type checking of templates. Since this will change in future commits, these changes prepare for it by renaming various methods and separating out component-specific data.
PR Close#60191
Narrows down the versions of TypeScript we need to support.
BREAKING CHANGE:
* TypeScript versions less than 5.8 are no longer supported.
PR Close#60197
This commit fixes a bug where nodes are reused across incremental
compilations. The source file's next template ID is lost because a new
source file is created but nodes may still be retained.
PR Close#60152
Instead of using a property on BinaryOperatorExpr / UnaryOperatorExpr,
introduce a ParenthesizedExpr which can be used to parenthesize any
expression.
PR Close#60127
Add support for the `void` operator in templates and host bindings.
This is useful when binding a listener that may return `false` and
unintentionally prevent the default event behavior.
Ex:
```
@Directive({
host: { '(mousedown)': 'void handleMousedown()' }
})
```
BREAKING CHANGE: `void` in an expression now refers to the operator
Previously an expression in the template like `{{void}}` referred to a
property on the component class. After this change it now refers to the
`void` operator, which would make the above example invalid. If you have
existing expressions that need to refer to a property named `void`,
change the expression to use `this.void` instead: `{{this.void}}`.
PR Close#59894
The CLI uses the `ts.transform` API to apply the Angular compiler's transformers
on the source files when `isolatedModules` is true (and various other constraints)
instead of going through a full `ts.Program.emit` operation. This results in the
transformers to operate in an environment where no emit resolver is available, which
was not previously accounted for. This commit reflects the possibility for the emit
resolver to be missing and handles this scenario accordingly.
Fixes#59837
PR Close#59869
When the compiler analyzes the defer blocks in a component, it generates two sets of dependencies: ones specific for each block and others from all the deferred blocks within the component. The logic that combines all the defer block dependencies wasn't de-duplicating them which resulted in us producing `setClassMetadataAsync` calls where the callback can have multiple parameters with the same name. This was a problem both in full and partial compilation, but the latter was more visible, because Babel throws an error in such cases.
These changes add some logic to de-duplicate the dependencies so that we produce valid code.
Fixes#59922.
PR Close#59926
When we generate an HMR replacement function, we determine which locals from the file are used and we pass them by reference. This works fine in most cases, but breaks down for const enums which don't have a runtime representation.
These changes work around the issue by passing in all the values as an object literal.
Fixes#59800.
PR Close#59815
Fixes that the partial evaluator was interpreting initializer-less enum members as undefined. In this case the value is the same as the index.
PR Close#59815
Makes the following cleanups in the output AST:
* The `TemplateLiteral` and `TemplateLiteralElement` nodes have been renamed to `TemplateLiteralExpr` and `TemplateLiteralElementExpr` respectively for consistency and to avoid overlaps with the expression AST nodes.
* The `TemplateLiteralExpr` and `TemplateLiteralElementExpr` have been refactored to be `Expression`s for correctness. This involves updating some existing code.
* The `TaggedTemplateExpr` has been renamed to `TaggedTemplateLiteralExpr` for consistency.
PR Close#59230
Updates the HMR dependencies extraction logic to handle conditional expressions.
For example, `providers: [condition ? providersA : providersB]`.
PR Close#59637
Fixes that we were filtering out the component itself from the set of dependencies when HMR is enabled, breaking self-referencing components.
Fixes#59632.
PR Close#59644
When HMR is enabled, we need to capture the dependencies used in a template and forward them to the HMR replacement function. One half of this process is static, meaning that we can't change it after the initial compilation. Tree shaking becomes a problem in such a case, because the user can change the template in a way that changes the set of dependencies which will start matching with the static part of the HMR code.
These changes disable the tree shaking when HMR is enabled to ensure that the dependencies stay stable.
Fixes#59581.
PR Close#59595
Adds a new diagnostic that ensures that a standalone component using custom structural directives in a template has the necessary imports for those directives.
Fixes#37322
PR Close#59443
Fixes that the HMR dependency extraction logic wasn't handling some node types. Most of these are a bit edge-case-ey in component definitions, but variable initializers and arrow functions can realistically happen in factories.
PR Close#59445
in order for the docs to process function entry, this commit refactor function extraction by keeping the implementation as a the default entry and adds all the overloads into a separate array of entries.
fixes#56144
PR Close#56489
Fixes that the compiler wasn't capturing defer block dependencies correctly when `supportTestBed` is disabled. We had tests for this, but we didn't notice the issue because the dependencies ended up being captured because of the `setClassMetadata` calls. Once they're disabled, the dependencies stopped being recorded.
Fixes#59310.
PR Close#59313
During the HMR dependency analysis we need to check if an identifier is top-level or not. We do this by looking at each identifier and its parent, however we didn't account for some cases. These changes expand our logic to cover more of the common node types.
Related to https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/59310#issuecomment-2563963501.
PR Close#59323
Some time ago we narrowed down the expressions we support in two-way bindings, because in most cases any apart from property reads doesn't make sense. This ended up preventing users from using `$any` in the binding since it's considered a function call.
These changes update the validation logic to allow `$any`.
Fixes#51165.
PR Close#59362
We recently introduced a custom error to allow us to catch certain types
of errors. Unfortunately it doesn't work as expected in G3 because the
Node execution seems to run with ES5.
PR Close#59219
Fixes a null pointer error in the unused standalone imports diagnostic. It was caused by an inconsistency in TypeScript's built-in types.
Fixes#58872.
PR Close#59064
In the past two-way bindings used to be interpreted as `foo = $event` at the parser level. In #54065 it was changed to preserve the actual expression, because it was problematic for supporting two-way binding to signals. This unintentionally ended up causing the TCB to two-way bindings to look something like `someOutput.subscribe($event => expr);` which does nothing. It largely hasn't been a problem, because the input side of two-way bindings was still being checked, except for the case where the input side of the two-way binding has a wider type than the output side.
These changes re-add type checking for the output side by generating the following TCB instead:
```
someOutput.subscribe($event => {
var _t1 = unwrapSignalValue(this.someField);
_t1 = $event;
});
```
PR Close#59002
The `isSplitTwoWayBinding` function was a bit misleading, because it has side effects. Renames the function make it a bit more explicit.
PR Close#59002
The current HMR compiler assumes that there will only be one namespace import in the generated code (`@angular/core`). This is incorrect, because the compiler may need to generate additional imports in some cases (e.g. importing directives through a module). These changes adjust the compiler to capture all the namespaces in an array and pass them along.
Fixes#58915.
PR Close#58924
Currently host bindings are in a bit of a weird state, because their source spans all point to the root object literal, rather than the individual expression. This is tricky to handle at the moment, because the object is being passed around as a `Record<string, string>` since the compiler needs to support both JIT and non-JIT environments, and because the AOT compiler evaluates the entire literal rather than doing it expression-by-expression. As a result, when we report errors in one of the host bindings, we end up highlighting the entire expression which can be very noisy in an IDE.
These changes aim to report a more accurate error for the most common case where the `host` object is initialized to a `string -> string` object literal by matching the failing expression to one of the property initializers. Note that this isn't 100% reliable, because we can't map cases like `host: SOME_CONST`, but it's still better than the current setup.
PR Close#58870
This fixes an issue where the lazy-routes migration would crash for component classes a
decorator without arguments in front of the `@Component` decorator (in particular, it needed
to be the first decorator).
Fixes#58793
PR Close#58796
This commit is only useful to Google. It fixes that some code relies on
`readConfiguration`, but doesn't properly parse Angular compiler options
as those are part of `bazelOptions.angularCompilerOptions` if the
1P-generated tsconfig's are used.
PR Close#58637
Currently the `getPotentialImportsFor` only accepts a `ClassDeclaration` as the context for generating an import, but that's not necessary because it doesn't require any class-specific information. These changes expand it to any `Node` so that it can be used when generating imports in testing declarations.
PR Close#58627
Initially the unused imports check was implemented so that it reports one diagnostic per component with the individual unused imports being highlighted through the `relatedInformation`. This works fine when reporting errors to the command line, but vscode appears to only show `relatedInformation` when the user hovers over a diagnostic which is a sub-par experience.
These changes switch to reporting a diagnostic for each unused import instead.
PR Close#58589
Previously we always ran Tsurge migrations with an Angular program, even
if it's a plain `ts_library` target. This has changed now, so we also
need to properly handle the case where a `ts_library` is analyzed, but
no Angular program is available.
PR Close#58541
Previously, `filterMethodOverloads` excluded all members without a body, causing issues with the extraction of functions and members in TypeScript types.
PR Close#58445
We were not properly passing around the TCB full program optimization,
so TCB generation was done per individual file. This significantly
slowed down reference resolution.
PR Close#58525
Currently when application source code references e.g. an NgModule that
points to references that aren't available, the compiler will break at
runtime without any actionable/reasonable error.
This could happen for example when a library is referenced in code, but
the library is simply not available in the `node_modules`. Clearly,
TypeScript would issue import diagnostics here, but the Angular compiler
shouldn't break fatally. This is useful for migrations which may run
against projects which aren't fully compilable. The compiler handles
this fine in all cases, except when processing `.d.ts` currently... and
the runtime exception invalides all other information of the program
etc.
This commit fixes this by degrading such unexpected cases for `.d.ts`
metadata reading to be handled gracefully. This matches existing logic
where the `.d.ts` doesn't necessarily match the "expecation"/"expected
format".
The worst case is that the Angular compiler will not have type
information for some directives of e.g. a library that just isn't
installed in local `node_modules`; compared to magical errors and
unexpected runtime behavior.
PR Close#58515
The unused imports diagnostic reports once on the entire initializer and then again once per unused imports. This ends up being a bit hard to follow, because in a lot of cases the code snippet looks identical.
These changes switch to highlighting the `imports:` part of the property declaration and only highlighting the unused imports without a message.
PR Close#58468
Disables the standalone by default behavior in the compiler when running against and older version of Angular. This is necessary, because the language service may be using the latest version of the compiler against and older version of core in a particular workspace.
PR Close#58405
Reports a diagnostic if an NgModule refers to itself in its `imports` or `exports`. Previously the compiler would go into an infinite loop.
Fixes#58224.
PR Close#58231
Prior to this commit, each abstract method that was overloaded was extracted. With this commit it will be extracted only once. Every overload was and still will be supported by the signatures.
fixes#57693
PR Close#57707
Adds the ability to generate the function that replaces the component's metadata during HMR. The HMR update module is a function that is loaded dynamically and as such it has some special considerations:
* It isn't bundled, because doing so will result in multiple version of core.
* Since it isn't bundled, all dependencies have to be passed in as parameters. These changes include some special logic to determine and output those dependencies.
* While HMR is enabled, we have to disable the functionality that generates dynamic imports and drop the dependencies inside `@defer` blocks, because we need to retain the ability to refer to them in case they're needed inside the HMR update function.
* The function is returned by the `NgCompiler` as a string for the CLI's sake.
PR Close#58205
Currently only the prefix of namespace imports is configurable, but for HMR we need to know ahead of time what the name of `@angular/core` will be. These changes allow us to rewrite it.
PR Close#58205
While effective, `preservePlaceholders` unfortunately is not viable in google3 at the moment due to some complexities with how TC extracts messages. Therefore this feature is being removed in favor of whitespace trimming of expressions, which is viable for TC and provides most of the same benefit.
This is a partial revert of dab722f9c8.
PR Close#58176
With this commit directives, components & pipes are standalone by default.
To be declared in an `NgModule`, those require now `standalone: false`.
PR Close#58169
This commit is part of the migration to standalone by default and sets up 2 files with a default value for standalone. They are still `false` in this case to land the change into G3 first. The switch to `true` will be executed in a follow-up PR.
PR Close#58175
For the HMR initializer block to support being used in a Vite setup with
import analysis, the import call expression needs to be a runtime generated
value and include the `@vite-ignore` special comment. Without the first,
Vite will error prior to loading the application. Without the second, a
warning will be shown for each import which is effectively each component
within the application when HMR is enabled.
PR Close#58173
The compiler's AST factories now support generating a dynamic import call
expression with either a string literal or an expression. The later is useful
for cases where the URL is dynamically created at runtime. Also, a leading
comment can now be added to the URL for cases where bundler behavior
needs to be included via special comments.
PR Close#58173
We're using `path.relative` to compute a relative path between a `SourceFile` and the one of the `rootDirs`. The problem is that the `rootDirs` get passed through `getCanonicalFileName` which lowercases the path in some platforms, while `SourceFile.fileName` is always case-insensitive. This yields a path outside of the project which we were ignoring.
This change passes the `SourceFile.fileName` before passing it through `path.relative` to ensure that we get a valid result.
PR Close#58150
Consider a template with a context variable `a`:
```
<ng-template let-a>{{this.a}}</ng-template>
```
t push -fAn interpolation inside that template to `this.a` should intuitively read the class variable `a`. However, today, it refers to the context variable `a`, both in the TCB and the generated code.
In this commit, the above interpolation now refers to the class field `a`.
BREAKING CHANGE: `this.foo` property reads no longer refer to template context variables. If you intended to read the template variable, do not use `this.`.
Fixes#55115
PR Close#55183
Whenever information is requested from the template checker right now,
the shim is only ensured to be generated for the single file/component.
This is slow in migrations where we don't want to collect diagnostics,
but rather request information from the component state.
This commit supports `OptimizeFor` in `checker#getTemplate`.
PR Close#58106
Currently we don't defer any symbols that have references outside of the `import` statement and the `imports` array. This is a bit too aggressive, because it's possible that the symbol is only used for types (e.g. `viewChild<SomeCmp>('ref')`) which will be stripped when emitting to JS.
These changes expand the logic so that references inside type nodes aren't considered.
**Note:** one special case is when the symbol used in constructor-based DI (e.g. `constructor(someCmp: SomeCmp)`, because these constructors will be compiled to `directiveInject` calls. We don't need to worry about them, because the compiler introduces an addition `import * as i1 from './some-cmp';` import that it uses to refer to the symbol.
Fixes#55991.
PR Close#58104
To provide support for HMR of inline component styles (`styles` decorator field), the AOT
compiler will now use the resource host transformation API with the Angular CLI to provide
external runtime stylesheet URLs when the `externalRuntimeStyles` compiler option is enabled.
This allows both a component's file-based and inline styles to be available for HMR when used
with a compatible development server such as with the Angular CLI. No behavioral change is
present if the `externalRuntimeStyles` option is not enabled or the resource host transformation
API is not used.
An `order` numeric field is also added to the transformation API which allows consumers such as
the Angular CLI to create identifiers for each inline style in a specific containing file.
PR Close#57613
The AOT compiler now has the capability to handle component stylesheet files as
external runtime files. External runtime files are stylesheets that are not embedded
within the component code at build time. Instead a URL path is emitted within a component's
metadata. When combined with separate updates to the shared style host and DOM renderer,
this will allow these stylesheet files to be fetched and processed by a development
server on-demand. This behavior is controlled by an internal compiler option `externalRuntimeStyles`.
The Angular CLI development server will also be updated to provide the serving functionality
once this capability is enabled. This capability enables upcoming features such as automatic
component style hot module replacement (HMR) and development server deferred stylesheet processing.
The current implementation does not affect the behavior of inline styles. Only the
behavior of stylesheet files referenced via component properties `styleUrl`/`styleUrls`
and relative template `link` elements are changed by enabling the internal option.
PR Close#57613
Some apps follow a pattern where they have an array of common declarations which is imported in most standalone components, but only some of the declarations are used. Such cases will currently raise the unused imports diagnostic but can be hard to fix, because it would require either removing declarations from the common array which can break other components, or copying only the necessary declarations from the array. Since neither of these solutions is great, this commit tweaks the logic for the diagnostic so that unused imports coming from _exported_ arrays are not reported (either from the same file or another one).
PR Close#57940
Add the `strictStandalone` flag to `angularCompilerOptions`. When set to
true, the compiler will require that all declarations of components,
directive, and pipes be standalone. When `standalone: false` is provided,
an error is raised.
Note that until the default value of the standalone flag is flipped, this
does not catch the case where a declaration does not specify a value for
`standalone`.
The default value of the `strictStandalone` flag is `false`.
PR Close#57935
The compiler and its file system implementation expects `fs.exists` to
return `true` even for directories. This caused issues with the TSConfig
resolution as `/` was looked up.
We fix this by making use of `stat` which is equally expensive to
`tree.exists`. The devkit tree's don't expose directory existance checks
out of the box.
Fixes#57887.
PR Close#57897
The visitor that all extended diagnostics are based on hadn't implemented the `visitIcu` method which meant that it wasn't detecting any code inside of them.
Fixes#57838.
PR Close#57845
Finalizes compiler implementation of the new `hydrate` triggers by:
* Reworking the logic that was depending on the `hydrateSpan` to distinguish hydrate triggers from non-hydrate triggers.
* Fixing that the `hydrate when` trigger didn't have a `hydrateSpan`.
* Adding an error if a parameter is passed into a `hydrate` trigger.
* Add an error if other `hydrate` triggers are used with `hydrate never`.
* Replacing the `prefetch` and `hydrate` flags in the template pipeline with a `modifiers` field.
* Fixing an error that was being thrown when reifying `hydrate` triggers in the pipeline.
* Adding quick info support for the `hydrate` keyword in the language service.
* Adding some tests for the new logic.
PR Close#57831
Whenever the `ngc` binary is used directly to parse configurations, we
should try to respect the configured file system like we do in all other
places. Right now one spot where we escape the FS is for reading
directories to e.g. support tsconfig#includes.
This commit fixes this, implementing TypeScript's read directory method
leveraging the configured FS. The approach taken here was used for a
couple of months/years for Angular Material migrations and no issues
were found.
PR Close#57805
Adds a new diagnostic that will report cases where a declaration is in the `imports` array, but isn't being used anywhere. The diagnostic is reported as a warning by default and can be controlled using the following option in the tsconfig:
```
{
"angularCompilerOptions": {
"extendedDiagnostics": {
"checks": {
"unusedStandaloneImports": "suppress"
}
}
}
}
```
**Note:** I'll look into a codefix for the language service in a follow-up.
Fixes#46766.
PR Close#57605
This commit changes the structure of the API extraction files to include all symbols used inside a package.
The structure is a `Map`, Symbol => package
eg: 'ApplicationRef' => '@angular/core'
PR Close#57346
in order for the docs to process function entry, this commit refactor function extraction by keeping the implementation as a the default entry and adds all the overloads into a separate array of entries.
PR Close#56489
This configures whether or not to preserve whitespace content when extracting messages from Angular templates in the legacy (View Engine) extraction pipeline.
This includes several bug fixes which unfortunately cannot be landed without changing message IDs in a breaking fashion and are necessary to properly trim whitespace. Instead these bug fixes are included only when the new flag is disabled.
PR Close#56507
Previously, the component handler was processing and resolving stylesheets
referenced via `styleUrl`/`styleUrls` multiple times when generating the
compiler metadata for components. The style resource information collection
for such styles has been further consolidated to avoid repeat resource loader
resolve calls which potentially could be expensive. Further optimization is
possible for the inline style case. However, inline styles here only require
AST traversal and no potentially expensive external resolve calls.
PR Close#57502
Previously, style elements within a template were used directly and not provided
to the optional transformation step that may be present on the resource host interface.
This causes such styles to not be processed by the Angular CLI's stylesheet pipeline
and could cause the styles to not work properly on all browsers. The style elements
are now processed in the same manner as inline styles within a component's metadata.
Link elements within a stylesheet were already being processed as `styleUrls`
equivalent and there is no behavior change in that regard.
PR Close#57429
Currently in some scenarios the compiler generates code like `null as any ? foo : bar` which will be invalid with [an upcoming TypeScript change](https://devblogs.microsoft.com/typescript/announcing-typescript-5-6-beta/#disallowed-nullish-and-truthy-checks). These changes switch to generating `0 as any` which is exempt from the change.
**Note:** I'm not starting the work to fully get us on TS 5.6 until the 18.2 release comes out, but this change is necessary to unblock an internal team.
PR Close#57303
This commit addresses a performance bottleneck in the `interpolatedSignalNotInvoked` extended
diagnostic by querying directive metadata instead of consulting the type-checker to determine if
a property binding corresponds with an input.
Fixes#57287
PR Close#57291
Similar to a previous fix that intended to make the JIT transforms
compatible with pre-transforms like e.g. Tsickle, we need to solve
an additional issue where the class properties are synthetic and result
in an `getSourceFile() => undefined` invocation that breaks the import
insertion, causing errors like:
```
TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'fileName')
```
PR Close#57262
This commit is similar to 98ed5b609e, and
makes use of the preparation work implemented there.
Similar to directives and components marked via `jit: true`, we also
need to do the same for JIT marked `@NgModule` classes. This is mostly
important for downleveling of decorators to support dependency injection
of such classes.
Inside Google3, migrating from `ts_library` to `ng_module` turns of
decorator downleveling, so the `jit: true` for NgModule's is implicitly
requesting/reliant on this transform— as expected.
PR Close#57212
Follow-up to #56961 which doesn't appear to have caught all the cases. This change moves the pre-emit untagging to `NgCompiler.prepareEmit` which seems to cover a bit more comared to `NgtscProgram.emit`.
Fixes#57135.
PR Close#57138
Updates the import manager to allow for a specific alias to be passed in. This is a prerequisite for switching schematics to the new import manager.
Note that passing in an alias disables identifier conflict resolution in order to avoid rewriting the alias that was passed in explicitly. For now this is fine since we have a very narrow use case for it, but we may want to revisit it in the future.
PR Close#57096
This allows use of poisoned data for migrations. Right now, migrations
often enable this flag by creating some deeper structures of the
Angular compiler, but with this change it's easier to enable as a
private compiler option.
This is helpful for migrations, specifically the signal input migration
as it allows us to generate as much TCB code as possible, for reference
resolution.
PR Close#57082
This commit exposes metadata about inputs that are defined inside
the `inputs` field of `@Directive` or `@Component` class decorators
This is useful and necessary information for migrations, like the
signal inputs migration.
PR Close#57082
Adds a new extended diagnostic that will flag `@let` declarations that aren't used within the template. The diagnostic can be turned off through the `extendedDiagnostics` compiler option.
PR Close#57033
Adds a new extended diagnostic that will flag `@let` declarations that aren't used within the template. The diagnostic can be turned off through the `extendedDiagnostics` compiler option.
PR Close#57033
In addition to quick fixes, this commit adds the ability to write
code refactoring actions that can be applied by users.
For example, we may implement a migration as a code refactoring action.
Notably the quick fix support, existing already, is insufficient as it
only allows for edits to be applied based on diagnostics shwon in e.g.
VSCode.
PR Close#56895
In #56358 we removed most of the places that untag the references to typecheck files, because it was causing the compiler to throw error when it produces diagnostics. This appears to have caused a regression in TS 5.4 which now emits the synthetic references.
These changes add tagging right before the program emits.
Fixes#56945.
PR Close#56961
This commit moves the JIT transforms into the ngtsc folder. They existed
outside of ngtsc mostly as an historic artifact— and now with compiler
relying on them even more deeply, it makes sense to move them into
`ngtsc/transform`.
PR Close#56892
Currently when compiling code with the Angular compiler, all classes
with Angular decorators are compiled with AOT. This includes type
checking, scope collection etc.
This may not be desirable for all components, e.g. dynamic components,
or test components w/ `TestBed.configureTestingModule` (if compiled with ngtsc).
Those components can opt out of AOT on a per component-basis via `jit:
true`. This is helpful as it allows incremental migrations/refactorings
to AOT. Whether we want to keep this capability long-term is something
to be discussed separately.
For now though, we should fix that components compiled with `jit: true`
actually work as expected. Currently this **not the case** as soon as
the new initializer APIs are used— as those do no longer declare class
metadata with decorators.
This commit runs the JIT transform on JIT-opted classes.
Related: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ox4atCJldWWDXlaYgwM-hU8BNsTpKNW7gx8OfZ0HtRY/edit?resourcekey=0-G1haTNYtD-dN0vNRkQ8_OQ&tab=t.0
PR Close#56892
When we process `@if` and `@for` blocks, we create a scope around their expressions in order to encapsulate the aliases to them. The problem is that this doesn't represent the actual structure since the expression is part of the outer scope. This surfaces by not raising the "used before declared" diagnostic for `@let` declarations.
These changes resolve the issue by processing the expression as a part of the parent scope.
Fixes#56842.
PR Close#56843
When running the JIT transforms in 1P w/ tsickle, tsickle will
transform source files before our custom transforms can run. This is
also impacting the Ivy transform and hence we use `ts.getOriginalNode`
in various places to inspect the source AST for detecting Angular.
For the JIT transform we need to do a similar change so that the
transform could run in 1P.
PR Close#56520
Enables the new `@let` syntax by default.
`@let` declarations are defined as:
1. The `@let` keyword.
2. Followed by one or more whitespaces.
3. Followed by a valid JavaScript name and zero or more whitespaces.
4. Followed by the `=` symbol and zero or more whitespaces.
5. Followed by an Angular expression which can be multi-line.
6. Terminated by the `;` symbol.
Example usage:
```
@let user = user$ | async;
@let greeting = user ? 'Hello, ' + user.name : 'Loading';
<h1>{{greeting}}</h1>
```
Fixes#15280.
PR Close#56715
The import manager ensures generation of unique identifiers when
inserting imports. This is done by inspecting existing identifiers
within the original source file, while also checking if a similar
identifier was generated at an earlier time. This is correct behavior.
We can improve the detection so that the same identifier can be
generated in different files. This is beneficial for schematic/migration
use-cases where we wouldn't want to generate import aliases in multiple
files just because we generated an import to e.g. `input` previously.
E.g. it's fine to generate
```ts
// a.ts
import {input} from '@angular/core';
// b.ts
import {input} from `@angular/core';
// instead of `input as input_1`.
```
PR Close#56406
This PR allows the language service to suggest imports for all directives returned from the
compiler, and generate the TypeScript module import and the decorator import when the component
is selected by the user.
PR Close#55595
Updates the check that prevent writes to template variables in two-way bindings to account for let declarations.
Also fixes some old tests that weren't properly setting up two-way bindings.
PR Close#56199
Integrates let declarations into the template type checker by producing corresponding constants in the TCB.
This also includes a couple of custom diagnostics to flag usages of let before they're declared and illegal writes to let declarations. We can't rely on TS for these checks, because it includes the variable name in the diagnostic.
PR Close#56199
Currently the template syntax errors are extracted in the template type check phase. But in local compilation mode we skip the type check phase. As a result template syntax errors are not displayed. With this change we show the template syntax diagnostics in local mode.
PR Close#55855
Introduces a new `LetDeclaration` into the Render3 AST, simiarly to the HTML AST, and adds an initial integration into the various visitors.
PR Close#55848
The compiler now checks if a signal is properly called on dom property bindings.
The ideal solution would be for the compiler to check if dom property bindings in general are properly typed,
but this is currently not the case, and it is a bigger task to land this change.
In the meantime, the signal diagnostic is augmented to catch cases like the following:
```
<div [id]="mySignal"></div>
```
PR Close#54324
When an `@if` expression has an alias, only the type of the alias is
currently narrowed. So for example, suppose `value` is `string|undefined`:
```
@if (value; as alias) {
{{ value.length }} <!-- error, value may be undefined -->
{{ alias.length }} <!-- no error, alias is narrowed -->
}
```
This is especially noticeable when the expression contains guards which are
preconditions for the aliased expression:
```
@if (a && b; as alias) {...}
```
In this case, `a` would not be narrowed within the body, even though the
`@if` condition forces it to be truthy. This is a bug.
The reason is that aliased expressions were previously type-checked as:
```
var alias = a && b;
if (alias) {
// nothing other than alias is narrowed
...
}
```
One option considered was to emit `const alias` instead of `var alias`.
TypeScript _does_ trace `const` expressions and narrow their individual
components when the overall expression is guarded:
```
const alias = a && b;
if (alias) {
// a, b are also narrowed
}
```
However, this narrowing has different semantics than if `a && b` appeared
directly in the guard expression. For example, object properties aren't
narrowed with this approach, so component properties (which are referenced
as e.g. `this.a`) would not be narrowed.
Instead, we amend the guard expression to include both the expression _and_ the
alias variable, enforcing that both are narrowed.
```
var alias = a && b;
if ((a && b) && alias) {
// a, b, and alias all narrowed correctly.
}
```
This form ensures all conditions within the guard expression get narrowed
while also narrowing the alias variable type.
Fixes#52855
PR Close#55835
Currently when attempting to retrieve a TCB symbol for an input binding
that refers to a signal input with e.g. `protected`, while the
`honorAccessModifiersForInputBindings` flag is `false`, Angular will
throw a runtime exception because the symbol retrieval code always
expects a proper field access in the TCB.
This is not the case with `honorAccessModifiersForInputBindings =
false`, as TCB will allocate a temporary variable when ignoring the
field access. This will then trigger the runtime exception (which we
added to flag such "unexpected" cases). This commit handles it
gracefully, as it's valid TCB, but we simply cannot generate a proper
TCB symbol (yet). This is similar to `@Input` decorator inputs.
In the future we may implement logic to build up TCB symbols for
non-property access bindings, for both signal inputs or `@Input`
inputs. This commit just avoids a build exception.
Related to: #54324.
PR Close#55774
Since we aren't using clang anymore, we can remove the comments and the workarounds that were in place to prevent it from doing the wrong thing.
PR Close#55750
Currently we add global extra imports to all the files in the compilation unit. However not all the files need extra imports. For example non-Angular files definitely do not need such extra imports, and in some cases these extra imports causes problems as the file is meant to be run the Node but it has Angular dependencies which are not compatible with Node. This change tries to limit extra import generation to a subset of files. Wit hthis change we create extra imports only for the files that contain at least one component whose NgModule is in a different file. This is because all other files do not need extra imports since they are either not Angular files or they already have all the imports that the components need.
PR Close#55548
Angular only checks the contents of template nodes in full type checking mode. After v17, the new control flow always had its body checked, even in basic mode, which started revealing compilation errors for apps that were using the schematic to automatically switch to the new syntax.
These changes mimic the old behavior by not checking the bodies of `if`, `switch` and `for` blocks in basic mode. Note that the expressions of the blocks are still going to be checked.
Fixes#52969.
PR Close#55360
In #52110 we had to use `if` statements to represent `switch` blocks, because TypeScript had a bug when narrowing the type of parenthesized `switch` statements. Now that it has been fixed by TypeScript and we don't support any version that has the broken behavior, we can go back to generating `switch` statements in the TCB which are simpler and better represent the user's code.
PR Close#55168
Allows for `SourceFileValidatorRule.checkNode` to produce a single diagnostic. The most common case should be one diagnostic per node so this allows us to save some array allocations.
PR Close#54993
Adds the new `SourceFileValidator` that will be used to check for file-level issues that may prevent Angular from working, like invoking the `input()` function outside of an initializer. Currently only one check is planned, but this setup will allow us to easily add more in the future.
PR Close#54993
For `FatalDiagnosticError` we are currently hiding the `message` string
field in favor of the actual TS `diagnosticMessage`.
This works as expected, but makes these errors hard to debug in certain
environments (e.g. Jasmine). That is because `null` is the value of
`message` at runtime. We fix this by just overriding the type, like we
originally intended to do.
In addition, we properly render message chains in the `Error#message`
field— so that these errors, when uncaught, are somewhat reasonable and
can be useful.
PR Close#54981
This commit ensures that the new APIs like `input`, `model`, `output`,
or signal-based queries are not accidentally used on fields that have a
problematic visibility/access level that won't work.
For example, queries defined using a private identifier (e.g. `#bla`)
will not be accessible by the Angular runtime and therefore _dont_ work.
This commit ensures:
- `input` is only declared via public and protected fields.
- `output` is only declared via public and protected fields.
- `model` is only declared via public and protected fields.
- signal queries are only declared via public, protected and TS private
fields (`private` works, while `#bla` does not).
Fixes#54863.
PR Close#54981
An initializer API like `input`, `output`, or signal queries may not be
compatible with certain access levels. E.g. queries cannot work with ES
private class fields.
This commit introduces a check for access levels into the initializer
API recognition— enforcing that every initializer API *clearly*
specifies what type of access is allowed.
PR Close#54981
This commit changes the TypeScript reflection host to:
* inspect / process ES private fields. e.g. `#someField` — those are
ignored right now and we would want to check them to issue
diagnostics.
* determine an access level of a class member. E.g. a member may be
public, may be private, may be ES private, or public readonly. This
can then be used in various checks later.
PR Close#54981
Updates the function that parses initializer APIs to check any `Expression`, instead of expecting a class member. This will be useful for the upcoming changes.
PR Close#54981
Adds logic to ingest the content of an `ng-content` element in the template type checker. We treat `ng-content` as a `ScopedNode`, because its content is inserted conditionally.
PR Close#54854
This commit adds support for ignoring specific doc entries when
extracting doc entries. This allows us to drop e.g. `InputFunction` from
the API docs, given that the `input` API entry holds all the relevant
information.
`InputFunction` only exists for type purposes in the `.d.ts`.
PR Close#54925
This commit improves the API documentation for `input` after
we added support for initializer APIs in angular.dev docs generation.
Changes:
- Rename `ReadT` to `T`. This conceptually makes it easy to talk about
inputs of type `T` if there is no transform involved. The common case.
- Rename `WriteT` to `TransformT`. This makes it clear that this is the
type that the "transform" needs to handle.
- Improves the "overall" description of the input function so that it
can be shown as a general overview for the API site.
- Improves usage notes to be a little more helpful, yielding more useful
content in the API docs usage notes section.
- Add short JSDoc description for each individual overload.
PR Close#54925
This commit adds support for extracting initializer API functions.
Initialixer API functions are functions conceptually that can are
intended to be used as class member initializers.
Angular started introducing a few of these for the new signal
APIs, like `input`, `model` or signal-based queries.
These APIs are currently confusingly represented in the API docs because
the API extraction:
- does not properly account for call signatures of interfaces
- does not expose information about sub-property objects and call
signatures (e.g. `input.required`)
- the docs rendering syntax highlighting is too bloated and confusing
with all types being included.
This commit adds support for initializer API functions, namely two
variants:
- interface-based initializer APIs. e.g. `export const input:
InputFunction`- which is a pattern for `input` and `input.required`.
- function-based simpler initializer APIs with overloads. e.g.
`contentChildren` has many signatures but doesn't need to be an
interface as there are no sub-property call signatures.
PR Close#54925
Builds on top of the previous changes to add support for deferred blocks during partial compilation. To do this, the following changes had to be made:
* The metadata passed into `ɵɵngDeclareComponent` has an additional field called `deferBlockDependencies` which has an array of the dependency loading functions for each defer block in the template. During linking, the dependency functions are loaded by matching their template index to the index in the `deferBlockDependencies` array.
* There's a new `ɵɵngDeclareClassMetadataAsync` function that is created for components that have deferred dependencies. It gets transpiled to `setClassMetadataAsync` and works in the same way by capturing a dependency loading function and setting the metadata after the dependencies are resolved. It also has some extra fields for capturing the version which are standard in linker-generated code.
* Deferred import statements are now stripped in partial compilation mode, similar to full compilation.
PR Close#54908
Updates the type of the resolver function to be any `Expression` since JIT may receive a function reference rather than a `ArrowFunctionExpr`.
PR Close#54908
Updates the logic that detects if a node should be checked for control flow content projection to exit as soon as it detects a second root node, instead of counting the total and then checking if it's more than one.
PR Close#54921
Previously only the first branch of an `if` block was captured for content projection. This was done because of some planned refactors in the future. Since we've decided not to apply those refactors to conditionals, these changes update the compiler to capture each branch individually for content projection purposes.
PR Close#54921
Currently when aliasing a `for` loop variable with `let`, we replace the variable's old name with the new one. Since users have found this to be confusing, these changes switch to a model where the variable is available both under the original name and the new one.
Fixes#52528.
PR Close#54942
Move the initialization of class field `DelegatingPerfRecorder` into the constructor.
This fixes the error : `TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'eventCount')`
This is blocking the roll-out of public class.
PR Close#54834
This commit updates the logic for preserving file overview comments
to be more reliable and less dependent on previous transforms.
Previously, with the old import manager, we had a utility called
`addImport` that always separated import statements and non-import
statements. This meant that the non-emitted statement from Tsickle
for the synthetic file-overview comments no longer lived at the
beginning of the file.
`addImports` tried to overcome this by adding another new non-emitted
statement *before* all imports. This then was later used by the
transform (or was assumed!) to attach the synthetic file overview
comments if the original tsickle AST Node is no longer at the top.
This logic can be improved, because the import manager shouldn't need to
bother about this fileoverview non-emitted statement, and the logic for
re-attaching the fileoverview comment should be local. This commit fixes
this and makes it a local transform.
PR Close#54819
This commit adds some unit tests verifying the import generation in TCB
files and inline blocks. We don't seem to have any unit tests for these
in general. This commit adds some, verifying some characteristics we
would like to guarantee.
PR Close#54819
To ease review and to allow for both instances to co-exist, `ImportManagerV2`
was introduced. This commit renames it to `ImportManager` now that we
deleted the older one.
PR Close#54819
Updates the type-check block generation code (also for inline type check
blocks) to use the new import manager.
This is now a requirement because the translator utilities from the
reference emit environment expect an import manager that follows the
new contract established via `ImportGenerator<TFile, TExpression>`.
For type check files, we can simply print new imports as we don't expect
existing imports to be updated. That is because type check files do not
have any _original_ source files (or in practice— those are empty).
For type check blocks inline, or constructors, imports _may_ be re-used.
This is great as it helps fixing some incrementality bugs that we were
seeing in the type check code. That is, sometimes the type check block
code may generate imports conditionally for e.g. `TemplateRef`, or
animations. Those then **prevent** incremental re-use if TCB code
switches between those continously. We tried to account for that with
signal inputs by always pre-generating such imports. This fixed the
issue for type-check files, but for inline type check blocks this is
different as we would introduce new imports in user code that would then
be changed back in subsequential edit iterations. See:
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/53521#pullrequestreview-1778130879.
In practice, the assumption was that we would be fine since user code is
most likely containing imports to `@angular/core` already. That is a
true assumption, but unfortunately it doesn't help with incremental
re-use because TypeScript's structural change detection does not dedupe
and expects 1:1 exact imports from their old source files.
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/56845
To improve incremental re-use for the type check integration, we should
re-use original source file imports when possible. This commit enables
this.
To update imports and execute inline operations, we are now uisng
`magic-string` (which is then bundled) as it simplifies the string
manipulatuons.
PR Close#54819
This commit switches ngtsc's JS and DTS transform to use the new import
manager. This is a drop-in replacement as we've updated the translator
helpers in the previous commit to align with the new API suggested by
the `ImportManagerV2` (to be renamed then).
PR Close#54819
`ImportGenerator` is the abstraction used by the translator functions to
insert imports for `ExternalExpr` in an AST-agnostic way.
This was built specifically for the linker which does not use any of the
complex import managers- but rather re-uses `ngImport` or uses
`ngImport.Bla`.
This commit also switches the linker AST-agnostic generator to follow
the new signatures. This was rather trivial.
PR Close#54819
This commit introduces a new implementation of `ImportManager` that has
numerous benefits:
- It allows efficient re-use of original source file imports.
* either fully re-using original imports if matching
* updating existing import declarations to include new symbols.
- It allows efficient re-use of previous generated imports.
- The manager can be used for schematics and migrations.
The implementation is a rework of the import manager that we originally
built for schematics in Angular Material, but this commit improved it
to be more flexible, more readable, and "correct".
In follow-ups we can use this for schematics/migrations.
PR Close#54819
Moves the logic that creates the defer resolver function into `@angular/compiler` for consistency with the rest of the compilation APIs. Also renames some of the symbols to make it clearer what they're used for.
PR Close#54759
Fixes an issue where we were outputting the reference to non-deferrable dependencies as strings, rather than going through the reference emitter. This caused some issues internally because the reference wasn't maintained in the generated JS.
PR Close#54759
Currently we have the `deferrableDeclToImportDecl`, `deferBlocks`, `deferrableTypes` and `deferBlockDepsEmitMode` fields on the `R3ComponentMetadata` which is incorrect, because the interface is used both for JIT and AOT mode even though the information for those fields is AOT-specific. It will be problematic for partial compilation since the runtime will have a reference to the dependency loading function, but will not be able to provide any of the other information.
These changes make the following refactors:
1. It changes the defer-related information in `R3ComponentMetadata` to include only references to dependency functions which can be provided both in JIT and AOT.
2. Moves the AOT-specific defer analysis into the `ComponentResolutionData`.
3. Moves the construction the defer dependency function into the compilation phase of the `ComponentDecoratorHandler`.
4. Drops support for defer blocks from the `TemplateDefinitionBuilder`. This allows us to clean up some TDB-specific code and shouldn't have an effect on users since the TDB isn't used anymore.
PR Close#54759
Updates the instruction generation for two-way bindings to only emit the `twoWayBindingSet` call when writing to template variables. Since template variables are constants, it's only allowed to write to them when they're signals. Non-signal values are flagged during template type checking.
Fixes#54670.
PR Close#54714
We have a diagnostic that reports writes to template variables which worked both for regular event bindings and two-way bindings, however the latter was broken by #54154 because two-way bindings no longer had a `PropertyWrite` AST.
These changes fix the diagnostic and expand it to allow two-way bindings to template variables that are signals.
PR Close#54714
Moves the check which ensures that there are no writes to template variables into the `TemplateSemanticsChecker` to prepare for the upcoming changes.
PR Close#54714
Introduces a new `TemplateSemanticsChecker` that will be used to flag semantic errors in the user's template. Currently we do some of this in the type check block, but the problem is that it doesn't have access to the template type checker which prevents us from properly checking cases like #54670. This pass is also distinct from the extended template checks, because we don't want users to be able to turn the checks off and we want them to run even if `strictTemplates` are disabled.
PR Close#54714
`TemplateDefinitionBuilder` is the legacy template compiler, and was replaced by Template Pipeline as the default in v17.3.
This PR attempts to delete `TemplateDefinitionBuilder`, `ExpressionConverter`, and various helpers (i18n context, style builder, property visitors, etc).
Consider this a first pass: a lot of code has not yet been deleted (e.g. old TDB-specific test cases), and I'm sure I have missed additional helper code.
PR Close#54757
Currently we have the `deferrableDeclToImportDecl`, `deferBlocks`, `deferrableTypes` and `deferBlockDepsEmitMode` fields on the `R3ComponentMetadata` which is incorrect, because the interface is used both for JIT and AOT mode even though the information for those fields is AOT-specific. It will be problematic for partial compilation since the runtime will have a reference to the dependency loading function, but will not be able to provide any of the other information.
These changes make the following refactors:
1. It changes the defer-related information in `R3ComponentMetadata` to include only references to dependency functions which can be provided both in JIT and AOT.
2. Moves the AOT-specific defer analysis into the `ComponentResolutionData`.
3. Moves the construction the defer dependency function into the compilation phase of the `ComponentDecoratorHandler`.
4. Drops support for defer blocks from the `TemplateDefinitionBuilder`. This allows us to clean up some TDB-specific code and shouldn't have an effect on users since the TDB isn't used anymore.
PR Close#54700
Currently the `makeProgram` utility from `ngtsc/testing` does not use
the test host by default- optimizing for source file caching.
Additionally, the host can be updated to attempt caching of the `.d.ts`
files from `@angular/core`— whether that's fake core, or the real core-
is irrelevant. We are never caching if these changes between tests, so
correctness is guaranteed.
This commit reduces the type check test times form 80s to just 11
seconds, faster than what it was before with `fake_core`. The ngtsc
tests also run significantly faster. From 40s to 30s
PR Close#54650
This commit allows us to detect initializer APIs like
`outputFromObservable` that are declared in different modules- not
necessarily `@angular/core`.
PR Close#54650
This commit exposes the new `output()` API with numerous benefits:
- Symmetrical API to `input()`, `model()` etc.
- Fixed types for `EventEmitter.emit`— current `emit` method of
`EventEmitter` is broken and accepts `undefined` via `emit(value?: T)`
- Removal of RxJS specific concepts from outputs. error channels,
completion channels etc. We now have a simple consistent
interface.
- Automatic clean-up of subscribers upon directive/component destory-
when subscribed programmatically.
```ts
@Directive({..})
export class MyDir {
nameChange = output<string>(); // OutputEmitterRef<string>
onClick = output(); // OutputEmitterRef<void>
}
```
Note: RxJS custom observable cases will be handled in future commits via
explicit helpers from the interop.
PR Close#54650
This commit replaces `fake_core` with the real `@angular/core`
output. See previous commit for reasons.
Overall, this commit:
* Replaces references of `fake_core`
* Fixes tests that were testing Angular compiler detection that _would_
already be flagged by type-checking of TS directly. We keep these
tests for now, and add `@ts-ignore` to verify the Angular checks, in
case type checking is disabled in user applications- but it's worth
considering to remove these tests. Follow-up question/non-priority.
* Adds `@ts-ignore` to the tests for `defer` 1P because the property is
marked as `@internal` and now is (correctly) causing failures in the
compiler test environment.
* Fixes a couple of tests with typos, wrong properties etc that
previously weren't detected! A good sign.
PR Close#54650
As part of improving test safety of the compiler, I've noticed that
we have a special pass for detecting external `ModuleWithProviders`
where we detect the module type from an object literal.
This literal is structured like the following: `{ngModule: T}`. The
detection currently takes `T` directly, but in practice it should be
`typeof T` to satisfy the `ModuleWithProviders` type that is accepted
as part of `Component#imports`.
This commit adds support for this, so that we can fix the unit test
in preparation for using the real Angular core types in ngtsc tests.
PR Close#54650
Fixes that a query like `viewChild('locator', {read: ElementRef<HTMLElement>})` would throw because we didn't account for expressions with type parameters.
I've also included support for parenthesized expressions and `as` expressions since it's pretty easy to support them.
Fixes#54645.
PR Close#54647
Fixes that initializer functions weren't being recognized if they are aliased (e.g. `import {model as alias} from '@angular/core';`).
To do this efficiently, I had to introduce the `ImportedSymbolsTracker` which scans the top-level imports of a file and allows them to be checked quickly, without having to go through the type checker. It will be useful in the future when verifying that that initializer APIs aren't used in unexpected places.
I've also introduced tests specifically for the `tryParseInitializerApiMember` function so that we can test it in isolation instead of going through the various functions that call into it.
PR Close#54609
Fixes that initializer functions weren't being recognized if they are aliased (e.g. `import {model as alias} from '@angular/core';`).
To do this efficiently, I had to introduce the `ImportedSymbolsTracker` which scans the top-level imports of a file and allows them to be checked quickly, without having to go through the type checker. It will be useful in the future when verifying that that initializer APIs aren't used in unexpected places.
I've also introduced tests specifically for the `tryParseInitializerApiMember` function so that we can test it in isolation instead of going through the various functions that call into it.
PR Close#54480
The diagnostic for signals that haven't been invoked wasn't working internally, because the path to `@angular/core` is different. These changes resolve the issue and do some general cleanup.
PR Close#54585
Template pipeline is now the default template compiler.
A pair of source map tests is failing, related to DI in JIT mode; I will fix and re-enable these during the preview period.
PR Close#54571
We have a couple of cases now (#53753 and #54414) where we're forced to redefine enums as object literals. These literals aren't rendered in the best way in the docs so these changes introduce a new `object-literal-as-enum` tag that we can use to mark them so they're treated for documentation purposes.
PR Close#54487
This commit addresses a problem with PR #53695 that introduced support for default imports,
where the actual dynamic import used in the defer loading function continued to use the
symbol name, instead of `.default` for the dynamic import. This issue went unnoticed in the
testcase because a proper instance was being generated for the `ɵsetClassMetadataAsync` function,
but not the generated dependency loader function.
Fixes#54491
PR Close#54495
The version detection condition for signal two-way bindings used an OR
instead of an AND, resulting in every `.0` patch version being considered
as supporting two-way bindings to signals.
This commit fixes the logic and adds additional parentheses to ensure the
meaning of the condition is more clear. Long term, we should switch to
semver version parsing instead.
PR Close#54443
In order to allow both signals and non-signals in two-way bindings, we have to pass the expression through `ɵunwrapWritableSignal`. The problem is that the language service uses a bundled compiler that is fairly new, but it may be compiling an older version of Angular that doesn't expose `ɵunwrapWritableSignal` (see https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/2001).
These changes add a `_angularCoreVersion` flag to the compiler which the language service can use to pass the parsed Angular version to the compiler which can then decide whether to emit the function.
PR Close#54423
Currently we have two fake copies of `@angular/core` in the compiler tests which can be out of sync and cause inconsistent tests. These changes reuse a single copy instead.
PR Close#54344
The new `model()` signal introduces a `ModelSignal` type that needs to be handled by the interpolatedSignalNotInvoked diagnostic to catch issues like:
```
<div>{{ myModel }}</div>
```
PR Close#54338
The import of `module` can conflict with the native global variable called `module` and can break some internal tests. These switch to only importing the function we need.
PR Close#54333